The psychedelic rockers didn’t initially plan to make a pair of linked album. As frontman Stu Mackenzie explained in a statement, the original goal involved “the notes between the notes,” returning to the microtonal explorations they had first begun on 2017’s Flying Microtonal Banana. Then the quarantine compositions took on a life of their own.
As they approached the two-decade mark, heavy-metal shock-rockers W.A.S.P. shot this 2000 concert film before a live audience. Recorded at the Key Club in Los Angeles, Califonia, W.A.S.P.: The Sting - Live at the Key Club - L.A. features the Blackie Lawless-led outfit performing several of their most popular songs including "Inside the Electric Circus," "Chainsaw Charlie," "Sleeping in the Fire," "Damnation Angels," "I Wanna Be Somebody," and seven others.~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide
As they approached the two-decade mark, heavy-metal shock-rockers W.A.S.P. shot this 2000 concert film before a live audience. Recorded at the Key Club in Los Angeles, Califonia, W.A.S.P.: The Sting - Live at the Key Club - L.A. features the Blackie Lawless-led outfit performing several of their most popular songs including "Inside the Electric Circus," "Chainsaw Charlie," "Sleeping in the Fire," "Damnation Angels," "I Wanna Be Somebody," and seven others. ~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide
It has been six (very) long years, since Blackie Lawless and his mean muthafuckin’ metal-making machine by the name of W.A.S.P have warmed our collective ears with a new album…
The psychedelic rockers didn’t initially plan to make a pair of linked album. As frontman Stu Mackenzie explained in a statement, the original goal involved “the notes between the notes,” returning to the microtonal explorations they had first begun on 2017’s Flying Microtonal Banana. Then the quarantine compositions took on a life of their own.
Andrew W.K.'s debut album, I Get Wet, certainly seemed like the ultimate expression of his party-hard, don't-stop-livin'-in-the-red philosophy. But if he was supposed to be a one-album phenomenon, no one bothered to let him know: The Wolf, his second album, arrives just a year and a half after I Get Wet was released in the U.S. So, how do you top a debut that was already turned up to 11? By cranking it up to 12, of course. The excellently named album opener "Victory Strikes Again" does just that, and serves as The Wolf's sonic statement of intent – it's all fist-in-the-air, exclamation-point climax, with Baroque metal guitar lines, insistent keyboards, and massed, shouted vocals that sound like an army of Andrew W.K.s ready to fight the good fight (or party the good party)…